After all these years I still struggle with this unresolved area. It's the expanse of green wall that I see whenever I enter my bedroom. It's the view out the slider, across the deck. It's a big solid nothing that ends abruptly at the stucco wall.
In winter, for a full six months, it's an expanse of ugly brown.
When I had the patio table and chairs and umbrella on the lower level, they filled the space in front of the vine and it didn't look so long and unbroken. There was form and height against the fence. But it wasn't workable -- too cramped and we never sat there, so I removed it.
Now the umbrella and expanded seating area fills the upper level nicely, but the wall of vine is more visible. I have some nice things planted in front of it on the left side but it's not much.
And on the other end -- the expanse I see from my slider door -- I've had a narrow upright juniper for visual height and interest. But.
The first one, Skyrocket, was nice at first but got too open and unwieldy and scraggly.
I took it out. I planted a Blue Arrow in its place, and hoped it would get full and dense and upright like Greg's had been. And blue tinged.
** Now I think it was a mistake to put another juniper there. I took it out today**
The area between the deck and the vine is a cramped 6 feet wide. I don't want something bulky right by the deck edge that blocks any access around to the back of the deck
No tree, juniper or otherwise, narrow or conical, is going to fit and still let me pass by, even a limbed up small tree.
And I want to tie the birdbath strip to the corner of the wall where the potting bench curve garden starts. Right now between the two it's unresolved and empty and the stranded juniper there did nothing.
The two rescued flagstones I put there don't do anything either and should be moved to surround the birdbath base.
> So . . I need an open path and unobstructed area plus an open view of the aspen trunks and back garden.
> At the same time I want something to look at against the fence.
Something.
From this view last summer you can barely see the spindly juniper but as it gets larger it will interrupt the line of sight to the shady back garden. A solid bulky tree, even tall and upright, is too much. I had to take it out.
Okay, what can I put smack in front of the wall of green to look at from inside the bedroom? Not another tree or dense shrub. And I don't want more containers scattered about in my gardens.
(One answer would be something to look at on the empty corner of the deck, but whatever I tried there -- containers, the peacock, a stump and birdhouse -- all looked silly. I like the free floating edge of the deck and want to keep it open.)
The cute birdhouse would work -- but it's very heavy and needs a strong support, not a shepherd's crook. I already have the plastic heart on a pole hanging between the birdbath and brown urn.
But the heart looks a lost there smack in the center. It's small and the thin metal crook disappears against the vine, making the heart look oddly suspended in air.
👉 Next summer hang a basket with blue lobelia instead of the heart-- maybe get a taller shepherd's crook as well and move it over toward the urn so it's not so rigidly centered. Stage the potted hakonechloa where the crook was, elevated a little.
On the right side hang the birdhouse above. Maybe add a division of my Black Adder agastache and a nice stand of Southern Charm verbascums. Both plants are vertical and upright, but not tall.
It's more open, it flows toward the garden on the right and there's some color. The birdhouse needs to hook to a sturdy arm on the fence and be out away from the thick foliage of the vine.
I really do not want to add a shrub or tree -- too stiff and bulky. And I do not want more pots scattered about the gardens. So the small stretch of agastache and verbascums might be nice. Nothing to look at in winter other than the birdhouse and stump, though.
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| Southern Charm |
The verbascums are Southern Charm hybrids (from Bluestone) and they are pretty but quite small, only about two feet tall. But the foliage is impactful and the flower stalks are spiky, upright and very cottagey looking. They can be planted in that area where there are no emitters. They want dry gravelly conditions.
They are nothing like the Frankenstein forms of the wild mullein growing in front!
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| Frankenforms |
I like the idea of tying the birdbath strip to the other end by the potting bench curve.
I like not fussing with pots or anything structural other than a little birdhouse on the fence. It's a quieter look but nothing much to look at out the slider door, especially in winter.
Here's what Gemini A.I thinks this planting would look like in front of the fence:
Nice. I might see if I can unpot one or two of the blue fescue grasses and plant them at the feet of these tall perennials. I like the blue accents in this shot. The grasses have been potted up for a few years and should be big enough to handle transplanting to this strip.
But once again I am creating a garden design that is small and busy -- little plants mixed together. See my prior post, lamenting exactly that. And here I am taking out a singular tree and substituting . . . um, lots of stuff.